Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 83207 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 71 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 George 7 Mr. 6 Mrs. 6 Eliot 5 Miss 5 London 5 Lewes 4 life 4 letter 4 great 4 July 4 Blackwood 4 Bede 4 Adam 3 sidenote 3 man 3 Romola 3 October 3 November 3 June 3 John 3 January 3 Hennell 3 God 3 Evans 3 England 3 December 3 Charles 3 Bray 3 August 2 work 2 love 2 jewish 2 german 2 english 2 Spanish 2 September 2 Sara 2 Middlemarch 2 Marian 2 Maggie 2 Journal 2 Gypsy 2 February 2 Deronda 2 Daniel 2 Cross 2 Congreve 2 Bodichon 2 April Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2169 life 1989 letter 1568 man 1060 time 1051 day 1031 book 998 sidenote 929 work 769 mind 752 year 691 thing 657 woman 656 world 598 friend 586 love 579 nature 571 character 550 way 544 one 519 thought 501 word 471 people 442 place 432 house 409 self 407 soul 400 power 400 part 399 novel 396 feeling 390 nothing 383 sympathy 383 idea 378 story 377 author 365 hand 357 heart 355 child 336 morning 332 interest 329 form 326 side 323 writing 319 fact 317 spirit 315 picture 314 experience 312 sense 310 father 308 evening Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 5258 _ 1452 Mr. 1248 George 1038 Eliot 957 Mrs. 798 Miss 689 Lewes 440 Blackwood 418 Hennell 358 Evans 357 Adam 310 John 304 Bede 288 Sara 270 God 267 Bray 245 London 241 ii 229 i. 217 Journal 204 Congreve 201 May 186 July 186 England 185 Charles 183 Romola 179 Life 176 Review 167 April 166 June 163 St. 156 Dr. 141 Deronda 137 Dec. 137 Cross 136 iii 127 Madame 126 Sir 125 Mill 123 Nov. 119 March 117 Spencer 116 Westminster 116 Professor 116 Jan. 115 Maggie 114 Christianity 113 Oct. 113 G. 112 Magazine Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8856 i 5921 it 3730 you 3641 we 3532 he 3258 she 2673 me 1467 they 1301 him 1242 us 1127 her 1061 them 353 one 326 himself 277 myself 265 herself 252 itself 183 themselves 120 ourselves 75 yourself 49 yours 41 mine 29 hers 27 thee 25 his 13 ours 12 theirs 11 ii 10 thyself 3 ye 3 ''em 2 yourselves 2 je 2 ''s 1 you''ll 1 we''n 1 thy 1 oneself 1 imself 1 iii.--sunset 1 hisself 1 him,-- 1 em 1 ce Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 24950 be 9609 have 2234 do 1690 make 1531 see 1394 write 1389 say 1281 give 1244 go 1239 come 1148 think 1089 know 925 read 870 find 801 feel 774 take 714 seem 681 tell 608 get 604 look 517 live 441 call 436 leave 420 become 415 hear 409 send 406 begin 399 show 352 believe 345 bring 325 bear 320 like 315 want 299 hope 296 love 295 speak 286 keep 273 use 263 wish 256 work 256 appear 254 stand 254 follow 237 turn 235 put 226 let 224 enjoy 223 pass 218 lie 214 help Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4583 not 1858 so 1796 more 1391 very 1334 great 1222 well 1155 only 1136 good 1112 much 1102 other 956 little 899 own 891 first 888 most 808 as 772 now 708 out 693 up 686 old 643 then 640 many 637 never 634 long 615 even 606 high 605 last 604 too 595 such 576 here 525 new 509 just 506 same 504 human 493 again 465 ever 463 always 445 true 423 still 421 moral 409 far 397 rather 378 also 361 less 354 large 349 quite 337 social 333 full 328 once 319 there 317 fine Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 322 good 180 most 173 high 170 least 101 great 55 fine 33 bad 31 deep 27 true 26 noble 22 full 20 pure 20 early 19 large 18 near 16 strong 16 late 15 eld 13 warm 13 slight 12 small 12 happy 12 bright 11 subtle 11 rich 11 low 11 Most 10 lovely 10 keen 9 young 8 rare 8 grand 7 pleasant 7 long 7 fair 7 easy 7 close 6 wise 6 simple 5 quiet 5 broad 4 short 4 sad 4 plain 4 old 4 lofty 4 intense 4 dear 4 dark 4 common Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 708 most 33 well 30 least 1 ¦ 1 youngest 1 wisest 1 near 1 lest 1 highest 1 gentlest 1 freest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@coventry.ac.uk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 19 _ is _ 8 _ did _ 7 _ do _ 6 eliot did not 5 life is not 5 minds made better 5 one is so 4 _ does _ 4 _ is not 4 _ was _ 4 _ was not 4 eliot has not 4 eliot is not 4 letter was very 4 man is not 4 world has ever 3 _ are _ 3 _ are not 3 _ feel _ 3 _ thought _ 3 books are full 3 days are so 3 eliot does not 3 eliot was not 3 lewes has just 3 lewes has not 3 life is too 3 life was not 3 men are not 3 one gets older 3 world is not 2 _ am _ 2 _ be _ 2 _ has _ 2 _ have _ 2 _ is mr. 2 _ saw _ 2 _ see _ 2 books are all 2 books are not 2 characters are too 2 days go by 2 eliot has fairly 2 eliot has well 2 eliot is much 2 eliot was also 2 eliot was deeply 2 eliot was very 2 friends were continually 2 george was not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 life is no less 2 women were no longer 2 work is not yet 1 _ are not ethical 1 _ are not only 1 _ are not so 1 _ did not immediately 1 _ is not certain 1 _ is not so 1 books are not much 1 books are not yet 1 character does not easily 1 characters are not such 1 day does not exactly 1 days was not so 1 days were not many 1 eliot does not absolutely 1 eliot does not entirely 1 eliot had no greater 1 eliot had not full 1 eliot has not jane 1 eliot is no more 1 eliot is not exclusively 1 eliot is not so 1 eliot saw no one 1 eliot were not too 1 friends take no notice 1 george was not only 1 george was not sorry 1 letter was not worth 1 lewes had no letter 1 lewes has not half 1 lewes was not only 1 life are not inward 1 life are not so 1 life had no wide 1 life has no incidents 1 life has not very 1 life is not merely 1 life is not worth 1 life was no luxury 1 life was not hers 1 life were not ideally 1 life were not long 1 lives have no discernible 1 love has no place 1 man has no power 1 man has no real 1 man is no disadvantage 1 man is no longer A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 36847 author = Blind, Mathilde title = George Eliot date = keywords = Adam; Barton; Bede; Bray; CHAPTER; Daniel; Deronda; Dinah; Eliot; England; Evans; George; Glegg; Lewes; Maggie; Marian; Mary; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Romola; english; german; jewish; life; nature; work summary = Detailed accounts of GEORGE ELIOT''S life have hitherto been singularly GEORGE ELIOT''S early life, I enjoyed the privilege of meeting her forming an idea of the growth of GEORGE ELIOT''S mind, my warm thanks are By far the most exhaustive published account of GEORGE ELIOT''S life and of the imagination by which true artistic work is produced; George Eliot Mary Ann Evans, better known as "George Eliot," was born on November Is there not a strong family resemblance between this character and Mrs. Poyser, that masterpiece of George Eliot''s art? It is on this state of George Eliot''s life that we are now entering. The ''Scenes of Clerical Life'' were to George Eliot''s future works what a people heard that George Eliot had once been a Miss Marian Evans, who This was the most productive period of George Eliot''s life. seemed a necessary condition of life." But, as George Eliot says, "Power id = 17172 author = Brown, John Crombie title = The Ethics of George Eliot''s Works date = keywords = Dorothea; Eliot; Fedalma; George; God; Romola; Savonarola; Tito; great; high; life; love; self summary = happiness" in humanity which expresses the true link between man and God. The practical doctrine that with them underlies all others is, "Love not human frailty that is not vitally base and self-seeking, in subtle power as asserting and illustrating the highest life of humanity, as a true Divine law of life, and its only true fulfilment; self-sacrifice, not in true fulfilment of that Christian life whose great law is love. faithful to the highest good which life shall place before her. loving heart turns again and again to the thought of human sorrow and father''s love and trust, but--her own deepest and truest life. joy of the love which is entwined with her life, or the turning away from the two great antagonistic principles of human life--self-pleasing and far higher instincts and aims of life cannot accept her as an aid and human self-love. id = 11680 author = Cooke, George Willis title = George Eliot; a Critical Study of Her Life, Writings and Philosophy date = keywords = Adam; Bede; Blackwood; Christianity; Comte; Daniel; Deronda; Eliot; Evans; Felix; Floss; George; God; Gypsy; Holt; July; Lewes; London; Magazine; Maggie; Marian; Middlemarch; Mill; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Review; Romola; Scenes; Spanish; english; footnote; great; jewish; life; love; man; work summary = GEORGE ELIOT: A CRITICAL STUDY OF HER LIFE, WRITINGS AND PHILOSOPHY. through their pages on the same level of mind and life; and George Eliot has to teach about man, his social life, his moral responsibilities, his idea or new way of interpreting nature and life grows into form gradually, moral life, he comes to regard feeling as the divinest part of his nature, George Eliot believed that the better and nobler part of man''s life is to The mental life of man, according to George Eliot, is simply an expansion life George Eliot indicates her great genius and her profound insight. George Eliot presented her own theory of life. George Eliot''s characters are greater than their deeds; their inward life forth the power of the spiritual life as she conceived it, George Eliot as George Eliot''s work is artistic, poetic, moral and human, it is very id = 43043 author = Eliot, George title = George Eliot''s Life, as Related in Her Letters and Journals. Vol. 1 (of 3) date = keywords = April; August; Blackwood; Bray; Charles; Coventry; December; Eliot; England; Evans; February; George; Goethe; Griff; Hennell; January; Jesus; John; July; June; Lewes; Life; London; Martineau; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; November; October; Rosehill; Sara; Saturday; September; Strauss; Westminster; german; letter; sidenote summary = furniture at new house--Sewing--Reading "Life and Times of [Sidenote: Letter to Miss Lewis, Saturday evening, April, 1841.] week of years instead of days since you said to me your kind good-bye, [Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, end of June, (?) 1845.] [Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, Friday evening, autumn of [Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, Tuesday morning, Dec. Mrs. Bray--Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, with important [Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, end of Nov. 1846.] [Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, end of 1848.] [Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, beginning of April, 1850, from [Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, beginning of April, 1850, from [Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, end of Feb. 1856.] [Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, end of Feb. 1856.] [Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, end of Feb. 1856.] read--Articles written--Letters to Miss Hennell--"Life of id = 43044 author = Eliot, George title = George Eliot''s Life, as Related in Her Letters and Journals. Vol. 2 (of 3) date = keywords = Adam; April; August; Bede; Blackwood; Bodichon; Bray; Charles; Congreve; December; February; Florence; George; Hennell; January; John; Journal; July; June; Lewes; London; Madonna; March; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; November; October; Rome; San; Sara; St.; letter; sidenote summary = Shall I ever write another book as true as "Adam Bede?" The weight of now I have read your letter, I can''t help thinking more of your the other day about "Adam Bede." He says he feels the better for Blackwood--Wishes Carlyle to read "Adam Bede"--"Life of letter-writing to let the few people we care to hear from know at once recall the things we saw in Italy, I shall write as long a letter as liking to turn over the leaves of a book which I read first in our old My first letter to you about your book, after having read it through, as in the old days, I cannot feel easy without writing to tell you my write me one of your charming letters, making a little picture of [Sidenote: Letter to Mrs. Congreve, Christmas-day, 1864.] I have read several times your letter of the 19th, which I found id = 43045 author = Eliot, George title = George Eliot''s Life, as Related in Her Letters and Journals. Vol. 3 (of 3) date = keywords = Adam; August; Bede; Blackwood; Bodichon; Charles; Congreve; Cross; December; Dr.; Eliot; George; Gypsy; Hennell; January; John; Journal; July; June; Lewes; London; Madame; Middlemarch; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; November; October; Professor; September; Spanish; letter; sidenote summary = the poem is at present uncertain, but I feel so strongly what Mr. Lewes insists on, namely, the evil of making it too long, that I shall day at the Priory--Letter to Miss Hennell--Visit of Mr. Lewes Letter to Mrs. Congreve--Mr. Lewes''s return from Bonn--First Bodichon--Women''s work--Letter to Mrs. Congreve--England and what tends to human good--Letter to Mrs. Bray on the writing Mrs. Congreve--Letters to John Blackwood--Second edition of The letter was addressed to Mrs. Follen; and one morning when I called on her in London (how many years Blackwood--"Middlemarch" finished--Letter to Mrs. Cross on Homburg--German reading--Letter to Mrs. Cross from Taylor--Note-writing--Home for girls--Letter to Mrs. day, after reading the _Times_, I feel as if all one''s writing were I have been always able to write my letters and read my proofs, letter to, on Mr. Lewes''s illness, iii. letter to, on Thornton Lewes''s illness, iii. thanks for letter to the _Times_, iii. id = 12933 author = Hubbard, Elbert title = Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 01 Little Journeys to the Homes of Good Men and Great date = keywords = America; Carlyle; Dickens; Doctor; East; Edison; England; George; Gladstone; God; Goldsmith; Hawkins; Hugo; Ireland; London; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Roycroft; Ruskin; Saint; Shakespeare; Shop; Street; Swift; Turner; Victor; Whitman; good; great; little; man; time summary = man find the inspiration for carrying forward his great work? stage when the man says, "I always believed it." And so the good old public dining-room, and not a day passes but men and women of note sit at "Little Journeys to the Homes of Good Men and Great." Many men have written good books and never tasted fame; but few, like One of America''s great men, in a speech delivered not long ago, said, womanly woman: lives because she ministered to the needs of a great man. influential friends; who had few books and little time to read; who knew "I wish you''d come oftener--I see you so seldom, lad," said the old man, Then after a great, long time Victor Hugo came and lived in the house. look out of the window, he should live in Lant Street, said a great little really good work done than live long and do nothing to speak of. id = 17954 author = Morley, John title = Critical Miscellanies (Vol. 3 of 3), Essay 4: The Life of George Eliot date = keywords = Cross; Eliot; George; Mr.; great; letter; life; man summary = Essay 4: The Life of George Eliot THE LIFE OF GEORGE ELIOT.[1] THE LIFE OF GEORGE ELIOT.[1] [Footnote 1: _George Eliot''s Life_. surprised us if George Eliot had insisted that her works should remain George Eliot, after all, led the life of a studious recluse, with none As a mere letter-writer, George Eliot will not rank among the famous abound in her letters that George Eliot had any particular weakness for her thought.'' George Eliot had none of this facility. George Eliot did not live in the The writer of _Sylvia''s Lovers_, whose work George Eliot reader finds repellent in George Eliot''s later work might perhaps never As she says here:--''Life, though a good to men on the whole, most brilliant of George Eliot''s younger friends (see iii. men''s minds from the true sources of high and pure emotion (iii. mature form than in the best work of George Eliot, and her stories